Where’s the Beef?

When my father was home we usually ate dinner in the dining room. Puchi and I would set the table, with a table cloth, linen napkins, china and silverware.

My parents were not deeply religious, but we observed general Muslim practices. No pork products were allowed in the house, though liquor was admissible for guests, and occasionally my parents might have one drink or, in my mother’s case, one glass of wine.

When my father was not around, the dinner hour was more casual. Sometimes we’d eat at the kitchen table, laying out the food on the counters, buffet style, and grazing as we chatted with our mother about this or that.

Sometimes we ordered pizza. “What do you want on your pizza?” my mother would ask.

“Pepperoni,” I replied.

“We can’t have pepperoni,” my mother said. “It’s made with pork.”

“No it isn’t,” I lied. “They make it with beef.”

“Oh is that right? Well go ahead and order it then,” she said trusting me.

We ordered the pepperoni pizza and a mushroom pizza and maybe some other kind of pizza. Enough to feed all the people who were invariably around for the dinner hour– my sisters and brothers and any number of our friends. I don’t think my mother ever questioned my deceitful declaration that pepperoni was made with beef.

 I like pepperoni pizza.

I never really understood the no pork or alcohol rule. Or the no shellfish rule for that matter. Many of the Pakistani Muslims I encountered drank alcohol. I thought it was hypocritical. Alcohol was permissible but pork was not. So, I quietly started consuming pork products as a child, mostly pepperoni and sometimes bacon. As I got older I introduced alcohol to my diet as well. Many people would say I am not a good Muslim. And I would agree with them. In addition to the pork, shellfish, and alcohol consumption there’s the issue of my lesbianism which is also frowned upon in Islam.

When I’m not lying about how pepperoni is made, I keep my pork consumption on the down low. I make bolognese with mild Italian sausage, or I might order a side of bacon or chorizo with my eggs from time to time, but I don’t make a big deal about it.

My friend Jim introduced me to grilled figs wrapped in prosciutto. Jenny and I made them for a dinner party once, and knowing that one of our guests was a devout Muslim, we made sure to grill some figs without the prosciutto. I made the mistake of putting both on the same plate, which I should have known is also frowned upon in Muslim circles. You don’t want pork products touching non-pork products.

“What are these?” our Muslim guest asked.

“They’re figs wrapped in prosciutto,” I said. “You can’t eat them. They’re pork, but this side of the plate is not pork,” I explained.

She must not have heard me clearly because she promptly popped a prosciutto wrapped fig in her mouth and declared, “These are delicious!” And then she ate another and another.

I quickly ran to Jenny and said, “If anyone asks about the prosciutto wrapped figs, tell them it’s beef prosciutto.”

“But there’s no such things as beef prosciutto,” she said.

“Doesn’t matter,” I said. “Just make sure to say it’s beef prosciutto, they’ll never know there isn’t any such thing.”  Just like my mother didn’t know there wasn’t any such thing as beef pepperoni.

I did recently discover Halal pepperoni pizza. Halal is a term used to designate food seen as permissible according to Islamic law. Who knew? There is beef pepperoni after all.

No-Fly Watch List: The End?

I think I am off the No-Fly Watch List. The last two trips I took were like the good old days. Print boarding pass at home, breeze through security without any additional screening.

Now I am back to focusing on the regular inconveniences of airline travel. Like the drunk man that was removed from the plane before we took off. Or the television screen that kept cutting out because it was “searching for a signal.” Or the very large man that sat  in the middle seat next to me on the seven hour flight home from New York. To be fair, the large man did not cause me the kind of discomfort I anticipated when I saw him trying to get in his seat. He kept his arms to himself and generously passed me my Diet Coke and Terra Blue chips when the JetBlue staff was passing out snacks and beverages.

After we landed, our other fellow passenger in the aisle seat on the other side of the large man said to him, “You were really good on this flight. You didn’t need to get up once. You must have a lot of patience.” To which the large man replied, “I grew up with four older sisters.” Now that makes sense. I grew up with three older sisters and I am also very patient.

When I was in New York I had several meetings with various Foundations. New York office buildings have high security but I didn’t have any problems getting into the buildings after I showed my identification and they cross-checked my name to make sure I was on the list. The last day of my trip I had a meeting with the President of a large Foundation. We only had half an hour together and I wanted to be sure I was on time for the meeting. I arrived at the building about ten minutes early thinking that would give me plenty of time to get checked in with security and get upstairs.

“You’re not on the list,” the security guard said.

“But I have a meeting,” I responded.

“Your not on the list. You’ll have to call upstairs and ask them to fax me an email.” Fax an email? I was starting to get confused.

“I have to call upstairs?” I asked. This, too, seemed odd. By this point in the trip I had been to several high security buildings and usually the security people call upstairs to verify the visitor’s name. “Can you call upstairs?” I asked.

“No,” he responded. “You have to call.” I wasn’t sure what good it would do for me to be on the phone with the receptionist. But I went ahead and called upstairs.

“Hello, this is Surina Khan, I have an appointment with your President at 10:30 and I’m having a little trouble getting upstairs. Security says I am not on the list and they say you need to send an email.”

“I’m so sorry for this inconvenience,” the receptionist said. “I’ll email them right now.” Five minutes passed. And I called again. “I sent them the email five minutes ago,” she said.

“She sent the email five minutes ago,” I said to the security guard.

“I don’t have it yet,” he said. “When the email comes they will bring me the fax,” he said cryptically. Did he not know the difference between an email and a fax?

“Well, I’ve got her on the phone, can you just speak to her by phone?” I asked.

“No,” he said. “That’s not how the system works.”

Another five minutes passed and someone from the Foundation had to come down and get me. I finally got upstairs with only about fifteen minutes left in the half hour time we had allotted. I happen to know this Foundation president reads my blog from time to time, or at least my Facebook status updates, and he knows about the trouble I have been having with the No-Fly Watch List.

“You and security again. Racial profiling?” he asked with a knowing smile.

“I know,” I said. “I may have to blog about it.” Now that I seem not to be on the No-Fly Watch List any longer, I’m realizing that some security lists are important to be on.

I was able to get in some of these New York City buildings without any trouble.

Podge and Rodge

My sister Mimo sent a message on Skype today. A while back I emailed Mimo asking if I could blog about her engagement to Seamus (See: Who Needs Marriage? Posted February 12, 2010). I told her I was dying to tell her engagement story, but that I wouldn’t do it without her go ahead.

“Of course you have the go ahead. I am beyond caring what people think,” she wrote. “As Podge and Rodge say, ‘If I could care less, I would.'”

“Great!” I responded, “But who are Podge and Rodge?”

Apparently Mimo and Seamus cannot get on the internet that easily from Ireland, where they live, and it took her a while to get back to me. “We still do not have internet and I have to use a dongle to get connected.” I don’t know what a dongle is, but it sounds slightly obscene. She finally got back to me today about Podge and Rodge.

“Podge and Rodge are two v. v. (read: very very)  famous Irish puppets,” wrote Mimo. “They have their own T.V. show and everything. Seamus lives by their philosophy.” Mimo said she and Seamus have books by them as well as coffee mugs and bottle openers. ” Google them and maybe you will convert also. Happy St. Pattys. They are twin brothers.”
So I googled them, and they do in fact have their own television show, The Podge and Rodge Show.

.
I can’t really say that I understand their “philosophy” yet, but Podge and Rodge have been good for my relationship with my sisters with their “If I could care less, I would,” approach. Whenever Puchi or Mimo start acting testy, I say, “Remember Podge and Rodge,” and it works wonders. Happy St. Patrick’s Day.

Check All That Apply

Jenny was making a good point. “There’s no there there,” she said about the 2010 US Census. The Census categories do seem limited. Name, race, sex, date of birth, whether we own or rent our home, and the number of people living in it.

“Bank of America and Amazon.com know more about us than the US Census Bureau,” Jenny continued.
“Or Facebook,” I chimed in. “Facebook knows everything about us.” The US Census Bureau should get with Facebook or utilize technology by offering an online survey option in addition to the paper option for those who don’t have the necessary technology. This way, they could aggregate the data more easily. Not to mention the paper and postage an online option would save. It would be cost-effective, environmentally friendly, and would also allow for a few more questions.
For instance, Jenny and I checked unmarried partner, but wrote in domestic partner. Couldn’t they add that as a category? Not to mention LGBT. I’m all for Queering the Census, but I think they could also consider asking about education, occupation, income, whether we have health care. And what about pets? They didn’t even ask about Rosie and she’s a big part of our household.
Rosie would like to be counted in the US Census.
After we completed our form, I updated my status on Facebook, “I checked Other Asian for my race in the 2010 Census.” Jenny’s brother Dane commented, “Do they have a Eurotrash category or are we all considered white now?”
I told him, “You are now white. In previous years, you were considered pink according to Jenny’s papers.” Jenny’s birth certificate lists “complexion.” The categories are pink, brown, and we think it might have included yellow, but we need to fact check that.

Jenny has a registration card issued to her father in 1946. The racial categories listed are, “White, Negro, Oriental, Indian and Filipino.”  It also asks for complexion, “Sallow, light, ruddy, freckled, light brown, dark brown, or black.”

I guess I would be light brown or dark brown. I’m not sure. It depends on the season. But I’m still curious about this “Other Asian” category in the 2010 Census. Why did they separate Asian Indian from the rest of the South Asians? The Bangladeshis and Sri Lankans didn’t even make it onto the form.
Jenny’s other brother Neal chimed in on Facebook. He wanted to know, “Is there a category for ‘fond of Asians?’”
No, but they might consider including Gaysians and Rice Queens in the 2020 Census.

Other Asian

Our US Census form arrived in the mail. We want to be counted, so Jenny filled it out and asked me to mark my race. “I think you are Other Asian,” she said pointing to a box.

I’m used to checking the “Other” box on these kinds of forms, but “Other Asian” was new to me. When I was a kid growing up in Connecticut, I remember coming home from school, confused about which box I should check for some form. Back then I don’t think there was even a category for Asian, we were just simply “Other.”

At the time my mother insisted that I check “Caucasian” because she said we are descended from the Mongol Empire. I didn’t then, and probably don’t even now understand how this would make us Caucasian, so I continued to check “Other,” against her wishes. Though I am just now noticing that Caucasian has asian in it. Cauc-asian. I think I am on to something.

In later years the category of Asian Pacific Islander emerged as an option on this, that or another form and I began checking it. Asian Pacific Islander, or API, also became part of the vernacular. “Are you API?” people would ask me. It felt strange to lump myself into such a large population encompassing all of Asia and the Pacific Islands so I thought it best to be specific. “I was born in Pakistan,” I would respond.

Back to the 2010 US Census form. I could not help but notice that some of the other Asians got their own category. Like the Asian Indians, Japanese, Koreans, Filipinos, Vietnamese, Samoans, Native Hawaiians, Guamanians and Chamorros. Then there are two additional categories: “Other Pacific Islander” and “Other Asian.” If you check the “Other Asian” box like I did, the form asks you to “Print race, for example, Hmong, Laotian, Thai, Pakistani, Cambodian, and so on.”

And so on? I think the US Census needs a sensitivity training. Though I will say it was helpful to see Pakistani included in the “Other Asian,” list, otherwise I might have checked “Asian Indian.” After all, my parents were both born in India. Doesn’t that make me part Indian?

When I posted on my Facebook page that I had checked “Other Asian” on the US Census from, a colleague whose family is originally from India, commented, “Now I know what I check when I get a form.”

To which I wrote, “Actually you have your very own category: Asian Indian. We Pakistanis are relegated to Other Asian.”

This cannot be good for Indian Pakistani relations.

No-Fly Watch List: Part 7

I’ve started using my middle name when booking travel, and it seems to be helping when it comes to printing my boarding pass. Earlier this week, I was able to print my boarding pass from home for my flight to San Jose. I didn’t want to get too excited, it could have just been a glitch. I was flying a different airline from a different airport.  I flew Southwest  rather than my preferred airline, JetBlue, since I had to get to Santa Cruz, and JetBlue does not fly to San Jose (the closest airport to Santa Cruz), or at least not when I needed to go. This also means I flew out of Orange County instead of Long Beach, so I had an all around new No-Fly Watch List experience.

From Santa Cruz I drove to San Francisco to work out of the office for a day. When I tried to print my boarding pass for my flight home from SFO, it worked! Except for the minor detail that I was in my hotel room and did not have a printer, but I am confident that it will work when I get to the office. Could this mean I am no longer on the No-Fly Watch List? I hope so, although I was just starting to get used to the inconvenience. Plus my sister and her husband, a retired US Army Colonel, sent me an article, “Behind the Scenes: Crafting the US No-Fly Watch List,” and after reading it I was beginning to feel all important.

I am (or maybe now I can say was) among only two percent of people on the list who are US citizens. And I am (or was) one of 418,000 people in the Terrorist Screening Database and only one of 18,000 people selected for extra screening. This seems like an elite club of sorts. 18,000 people is not that many in the scheme of things. I was never denied a boarding pass or kept from flying which means I am not actually one of the 6,000 people on the No-Fly List. These people are not allowed to board planes. They are the super elite in the No-Fly Watch List community. Kind of like reverse Platinum Status.

Everything was looking good until I tried to plan ahead for my Spring travel. I may be able to print boarding passes, but I cannot seem to book flights anymore. Now why didn’t they think of this sooner? Forget about the No-Fly Watch List. If you’re on the list, they should just cut you off before the boarding pass and not even let you book a flight.  The No-Book Flight List.

I kept getting an error message when I tried booking my flight. When I called JetBlue to speak to an operator, she said, “I’ll have to charge you $15 to book it over the phone.”

“Umm, excuse me?” This was not going to work for me. “Since I can’t book it on the website, can you waive the fee?” I thought this was a reasonable request.

“No,” she said. “We haven’t had any complaints about the website.”I guess my problem did not rank as complaint status.

“So can you tell me what I’m supposed to do? You’re website doesn’t let me book the flight, so you’re going to charge me extra to do it over the phone?” I needed to speak to her leader. When I got the leader on the phone she was finally able to help me, but it sure did take a while.

Did I say JetBlue was my preferred airline? I may need to update that status.

No-Fly Watch List: Part 6

I think the Department of Homeland Security is reading my blog. Checking-in at the ticket counter on my way home from San Francisco this week was much faster. I didn’t even try printing my boarding pass in advance this time. What’s the point, really? I know I’m on the No-Fly Watch List so why bother?

The nice woman at the ticket counter checked me in. She didn’t fill out the No-Fly Watch List clearance form and handed me back my license. So I said, “No, No-Fly Watch List this time?”

And she said, “Oh yes, you’re on it.”

“But I didn’t see you filling out the form,” I responded.

“I’m doing it right now,” she said as she continued typing on the computer. Wow, that was fast, it was only last week that I suggested that it would be much more efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally friendly if they coordinated the No-Fly Watch List Clearance form information in a centralized database at the Department of Homeland Security. Were they reading my blog? And acting on my suggestions? Maybe I have a future consulting for the Department of Homeland Security, I thought to myself.

But no, the ticket agent was just being efficient. “Oh, I still have to fill out the form,” she informed me. “But I’ll just use the information on the computer and do it later so I don’t have to keep you waiting. So thoughtful.

I’ve interacted with the Department of Homeland Security before. I even have a special Department of Homeland Security mug, given to me by a US Border Patrol agent.

 

A few years ago I organized a tour of the California Mexico border for the staff and board of the Women’s Foundation of California, where I am employed.  We decided to coordinate the tour through the US Border Patrol to get the full inside scoop. My liaison at the Border Patrol was a woman named Wendi, a Senior Patrol Agent. Wendi was very friendly and guided us  along the double fence that separates Mexico from California. She gave us an overview of how the Border Patrol is protecting our security by keeping out the vulnerable people who come to the US seeking work, cleaning our houses, caring for our children, and working the farms so we all have fresh produce whenever we want.

I didn’t fault Wendi for the flaws in US immigration policy. She was just doing her job. Wendi became interested in working for the US Border Patrol because her father, a Mexican, used to help people who would get injured trying to cross the border. He did this work from Mexico, where Wendi grew up. She herself is an immigrant too, which made it harder for me to understand why she wanted to keep other immigrants out. She told me that her father was not happy when she decided to pursue a career with the US Border Patrol.

About a week after I returned home, I got a package in the mail from Wendi. She sent me a thank you note for taking interest in her work, and enclosed a Department of Homeland Security mug, which I feature prominently in my office.

No-Fly Watch List: Part 5

When I tried to print my boarding pass from home for this week’s episode of the No-Fly Watch List, I got the familiar red X notifying me that I needed to see a ticket agent at the full-service counter at the airport.

I got to the airport and was pleasantly surprised to find that I was not the only person in line on the No-Fly Watch List. I overheard the man ahead of me talking to the ticket agent. “It’s ridiculous,” he said sounding really irritable. “My name is Steven Smith, there’s no reason for me to be on the list. Smith is a common name.”

I knew exactly how he felt. Khan is a very common name too. Just because our names our common, does not mean we should be on the No-Fly Watch List.

Steven looked like a nice enough guy. Like he could be from the Midwest. Pink complexion, a bit of a paunch, slightly balding, gold-rimmed eyeglasses. But he had a bad attitude. He was huffing and puffing, clearly not happy about his status on the No-Fly Watch List. I could relate. Good-natured as I’m trying to be about this whole thing, let’s face it. It’s a drag to be on the No-Fly Watch List. But my philosophy is, if you have to be on the No-Fly Watch List, you might as well try and have a good attitude.

I felt like giving Steven a tip or two. “Steven,” I wanted to say to him, “it doesn’t help to get upset with the ticket agent. They didn’t put you on the list, and they can’t take you off it.” I was starting to feel sorry for the ticket agent. The poor guy had to deal with Steven’s misguided anger as well as the rest of us who were getting impatient in the line since Steven was taking so long to get checked in. The ticket agent was just doing his job, filling out the No-Fly Watch List Clearance form with his blue ball point Bic pen as fast as he could. But, I know from experience, it can take a good five minutes to fill out this form, and then you have to get one of your colleagues to witness it and sign off and that can take another minute or two. Jenny calls this “Dilbert’s Guide to National Security.”

I could sense the ticket agent’s increasing anxiety as he kept looking up at the line growing longer and longer. The people in line behind me were getting agitated.

For instance, the guy behind me started sighing audibly. “My flight leaves at 11am!” he shouted at no one. “Am I going to make it?” I know he was trying to cut in front of me. When I got up to the counter I led with, “I’m on the No-Fly Watch List too.” I thought this might expedite things. But by now the ticket agent was flustered. He filled out my paperwork as fast as he could and gave me my boarding pass and told me to go to Gate 3. “Thank you,” I said, “but can I have my license back?” He forgot he still had it. Good thing I was paying attention.

I’m beginning to think they should add an additional line at the airport. In addition to the bag drop line, and the full-service counter line, they should add a No-Fly Watch List line. This way, those of us on the list wont slow other passengers down.

The line at security was long too. Even though the Long Beach airport is tiny, it’s become a popular airport. The man in front of me in the security line was basically efficient. He emptied all his pockets, took his shoes and coat off, but he forgot to take off his belt. So he beeped going through the scanner, backed-up, and removed his belt. Then he forgot to collect his belt once he got through the scanner to the other side. The best part about this little mishap was the announcement that followed over the loudspeakers. “Attention passengers. If you do not have a belt, please return to the security area.” This made me giggle.

I thought it was fairly obvious that the man on the loudspeaker meant to say, “if you left your belt behind, please return to the security area.” So I was surprised when an older woman standing nearby looked all confused, “I don’t have a belt,” she said. “Do I need to go back to the security area? My flight is boarding.”

Before I was on the No-Fly Watch list I didn’t pay attention to all these airport details. Now traveling is comical. I wanted to take a picture to remember this experience, so I took this photo as I was boarding the plane. Plus, I needed a visual for this blog.

 
Flight 1438 to San Francisco.

It occurred to me that I probably should not be taking pictures of the plane given my designation on the No-Fly Watch List. It’s possible that I breached some kind of security protocol. But I was discreet.  I probably looked like I was just checking email on my iPhone. When I was on the plane, I got bored. So I started gazing out the window, and the clouds looked so pretty I decided to snap another photo which I posted on Facebook after we landed. I captioned the photo  “flying the friendly skies” which I thought was a display of a very positive attitude.

 Flying the friendly skies.

My friend Shauna commented on my Facebook post. “Oh, great.” she wrote. “They’re going to see this picture and think you’re taking covert shots of the engine…you are never getting off that No Fly Watch List.”

That’s the engine? I always thought those were the propellers, or is that the same thing as an engine?

War Bride

Puchi was telling me a story about our family history. “Our great grandmother was a war bride,” she said casually.

“That sounds so barbaric,” I said. “What’s a war bride?”

“That’s when they kill all the men and take the women.” That does sound barbaric.

Puchi learned about our great grandmother in her second grade history class. She came home one day from the Burnhall School in Abbottabad and told my mother about a disturbing history lesson from earlier in the day. The teacher told them a story about Sardar Samad Khan from the Afridi tribe. He was the General for Kashmir under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the first Maharaja of the Sikh empire from 1801 when he was crowned at the age of twenty-one until his death in 1839. The Maharaja had captured many principalities including some of the northern areas of regions that are now part of  Pakistan.

Ten years after the death of Maharajah Ranjit Singh in 1839, the British appointed Maharaja Gulab Singh. The principalities in the northern areas were not paying attention to the new Maharaja, so General Sardar Samad Khan hosted a lunch in Gilgit, a mountainous region in the foothills of the Karakorum mountain range. The General invited the twelve heads of state who were giving the Maharaja trouble, to the lunch in Gilgit.  Eleven of them showed up. The twelfth head of state, who did not attend, was from an area called Yasin, a high mountain valley in the Karakorum mountains.

After lunch, Sardar Samad Khan took each one of the Kings out for a walk around the grounds to discuss affairs of state. And after they left the compound he had each of their heads chopped off. He then went to Yasin to find the King of the principality who had not shown up for the lunch. After arriving in Yasin, Sardar Samad Khan and his army killed all the men and Sardar Samad Khan took the King’s wife as his seventh war bride. I’m not sure I would call her a “bride.” This seems like the definition of forced “marriage” to me.

Ami, hearing Puchi tell this story said, “Oh, yes, that story.” And she took out a photo and said, “This is the man you learned about in your history lesson. He’s your great grandfather.”

 
Sardar Samad Khan, our great grandfather pictured with his sword.

Our great grandfathers’ seventh war bride from Yasin, was our great grandmother. Ami used to say that there was a connection between our family and the Wali (or King) of Swat, a Valley in the Northwest Frontier Province of Pakistan. Apparently there were two sisters from the royal family of Swat. One was married to the King of Yasin and the other to the King of Chitral, another mountainous valley in the Karakorum mountain range. So it could be that our great grandmother was also descended from the royal family of Swat. This is all getting really confusing, or should I say Khanfusing? My head is spinning with all this family history.  

My mother heard these and other family stories from our grandfather, her father-in-law,  Brigadier Rematullah Khan, my father’s father. There’s another story about our grandfather being held as a Prisoner of War in Srinagar, Kashmir for a year, but that’s another story that I’ll need Puchi to tell me in greater detail.

 
Our grandfather, Brigadier Rematullah Khan pictured in his Indian Army uniform, under Colonial rule. This photo was probably taken in the early 1940s. It’s a black and white photo which has been colored in by hand.
For as long as I can remember, we used to say that our uncle, one of my father’s older brothers, Brigadier Aslam Khan, liberated the northern areas of Pakistan. I used to state this fact as if I knew what it meant. But as I got older I relaized I really had no idea what it meant. What does it mean to liberate the northern areas, and how did he actually go about doing this?
And now I’m beginning to piece it together. Because our great grandfather was the General for Kashmir under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, his family settled there. My father and his siblings were all born in Kashmir and they knew the rugged terrain of the northern areas well. Before partition, as Puchi told me, our uncle, Aslam Khan, covered up all the paths to Gilgit, Hunza, Yasin, and Chitral, so that the Indians would not be able to traverse them and claim the territories for India, and that’s how they became part of Pakistan in the Partition. There’s also a story about how Aslam Khan fought the Indians off in Baramulla and other regions in Kashmir, but I don’t know the details of that story.

 
Two generations of military men. Our grandfather, is seated in the middle and Brigadier Aslam Khan is seated next to him on the right. My father is standing directly behind his father in the naval uniform.  

Over time, most of the family dropped the name Afridi, but Puchi says that if you look up old school records for my father, his name was listed as Mohammed Afzal Khan Afridi. Ami used to say that the Afridis were one of the lost tribes of Israel. Puchi says some of the Afridis in Lucknow are being DNA tested to determine whether this is in fact true. So depending on how that turns out, we could also be part Jewish. Maybe that’s why there’s such a similarity between the spellings of Khan, the Muslim name, and Kahn, the Jewish name?

 
Our father as a young naval officer, the third generation of military men in his family.

No-Fly Watch List: Part 4

The ticket agent seemed confused. Her eyebrows were getting increasingly furrowed as she peered closer and closer to the computer screen. She had already handed me back my license but I knew she would need it again, so I kept it handy rather than putting it back in my wallet.

“I think you’re going to need this again,” I said gently, handing her my license.

“Oh, you’ve been through this before,” she said. “No wonder you were holding on to your license, you knew I would need it back.” She looked around for one of her colleagues to help her.

“I think you need the form that’s in there,” I said, pointing to a white binder.

And out came the blue ball point pen and the No-Fly Watch List Clearance paperwork. I saw her spelling my name Kahn, so I said, “You’re going to want to correct that. It’s K-h-a-n.” I really can’t help but wonder why they fill these forms out with pen and paper. That seems so 1995. How could it possibly be more efficient than filling out a form on a computer and sending it directly to the Department of Homeland Security to store in a centralized database?

Considering my travel schedule this month, my paperwork alone must be taking up precious binder space since the forms need to stay on file for 30 days. Think of all that paper. Not only does it seem inefficient, but costly, and not very environmentally friendly. I wonder if the Department of Homeland Security has a suggestion box?

Earlier today I tried to print out my boarding pass from the San Francisco office. Judy’s assistant, Gregg, helped me since I was having trouble printing from my laptop. “I need your date of birth and middle name,” he said.

They seem to have changed their interface since Tuesday, when I traveled to San Francisco. I was able to print my boarding pass from home for that flight. Today the website seemed to know I was on the No-Fly Watch List. It displayed a lengthy message about needing additional information and made some mention of the No-Fly Watch List. It asked for my middle name which confused me. I mean, I know my middle name but my license only has my middle initial and my passport has my full middle name, Afzal.

So we entered Afzal. We entered my date of birth. And pressed “Next,” and waited anxiously. And then the familiar error message with the red X popped up. Rats.

“Let’s try again!” I said cheerfully. ‘This time we’ll just add my middle initial.” No luck. Apparently you need to add more than two letters for a middle name, it won’t accept a middle initial but it has to match your government issued identification. So what happens if your government issued identification only has a middle initial? I’ll get back to you on that. In the meantime, I’m going to start carrying my passport around in the event that it helps to use my full middle name.

“How’d you get on the No-Fly Watch List anyway?” Gregg asked. “Have you ever carried a bomb on board?” Very funny.

I knew the drill.  I left the office a little early so I’d have enough time to stand in line at the ticket counter. Once the ticket agent completed her paperwork and got her supervisor to sign off on it, she handed me my boarding pass and informed me that the flight was delayed an hour. “There’s been a Ground Delay Program in effect today,” she said. This sounded like a Program of the Department of Homeland Security so I asked, “What’s a Ground Delay Program?”

“That’s when flights are delayed in taking off and delayed in landing. It’s been happening all day,” she said with a smile. Come on, really? They call that a Program?

I got through security in a jiffy. For one thing they have these fancy Pro-Vision scanners at SFO so they don’t need to pat you down. I also try not to get in line behind men. They slow me down. They’re always carrying this and that in their pockets. Loose change, paper clips, maybe a money clip. So they have to empty all their pockets. And they usually don’t consolidate everything in one pocket. The loose change might be in the front right pocket, so that gets emptied first. Then they might remember that the money clip is in their back left pocket. Then they go through and cause the scanner to beep, so they back up and realize they have some paper clips in their front left pocket. And those have to come out and go through the x-ray machine in a special bin since the rest of their stuff is already on its way through.

Men also tend to wear belts and this takes an extra minute or two to unbuckle, slide through all the belt loops, and place in a bin. I know I shouldn’t single out men for being slow. I know plenty of butch lesbians who wear belts, but I’ve noticed that more and more of them are carrying man purses so they don’t tend to have to search through all their pockets for this, that and the other thing. More men should consider man purses.

The upside to getting to the airport early and getting through the ticket counter and security line with all my traveler time-saving tips is that I have plenty of time to write this blog and enjoy a snack. Plus Jenny just texted me from the grocery store. She needs my recipe for bolognese. She’s kind enough to cook dinner and keep the household running while I hang around airports.

The flight is delayed another hour. Seems that Ground Delay Program is really successful. Forget the snack, I see a bar. I think I’ll have a Scotch. 

 
Passing the time at SFO.

PS: in case you’re interested in the Bolognese recipe, here’s what I just sent Jenny. File under Surina Khan Cook.

Bolognese

Saute 1 & 1/2 to 2 cups onions in a little olive oil with a pinch of crushed red pepper until lightly browned on medium high heat.

Add 1 lb mild Italian bulk pork sausage and 8 cloves of chopped garlic Saute until pork is browned.

Add 1 to 1 and 1/2  cups red wine. Let it boil a bit.

Add 1 cup heavy cream, 1 8 oz can tomatoes (I like fire-roasted), 1 tablespoon dried oregano, 2 bay leaves, and fresh ground black pepper.

Simmer. Get a glass of wine, go outside, sit on deck, relax. Repeat with several glasses of wine until bolognese is done (this can take up to 2 hours or more, the longer it simmers, the better it tastes), stirring occasionally.

Boil about 8 oz of pasta (I like fettuccine). Drain pasta and mix in with sauce. Let pasta and sauce co-mingle a bit.

Garnish with chopped parsley.

Serve with warm crusty bread and more wine (I suggest an Old Vine Zinfandel).